No stranger to research myself, the weeks and months @danglassmincer must have spent pouring over the gay archives of @bishopsgateinstitute alone must surely put him in line for a pink plaque himself. A city that is too big to ‘really know’ more than the places we lived and worked, in Queer Foot Prints, Dan has managed to do something few Londoners manage; traverse all four corners of our sprawling metropolis. Some of the streets I walked on, dancefloors I pounded and bars I propped up in the quarter century I lived there, get a mention or two in the sections on Soho, Westminster, Brixton, King’s Cross, Earl’s Court and Vauxhall. But far more than this, Dan’s hard work has uncovered fierce queer histories of people and organisations from marginalised sections of the rainbow family often overlooked by similar tomes on the queer history of the city - going back far further than the relatively short period that I called it home. Part historical record, part guide book, Queer Foot Prints certainly makes me want to discover parts of the city that were rarely on my well-worn paths - and to re-evaluate those postcodes where I trod most often. Thank you Dan for (no doubt) months of reading and interviewing. Now where do you want your pink plaque?